That’s more than talent. It’s MAGIC! If there’s anyone more talented that this man, I’d love to see their work. I’m always left speechless after watching every video.
Ive been watching this channel for a few years now and still blows me away his ability to run the grain along with everything else... goals! Thank You!!
Очень приятно видеть правильный инструмент в умелых руках ! С удовольствием посмотрел ваш фильм . Тоже люблю рубанки от Томаса Ли Нельсона и Веритас . С уважением из России
More stunning art work, I mean wood work from you guys. I guess after you do thousands of dovetails, they all come out perfect like yours. Great matchup on the wood grain. You have produced a legacy set that someone will enjoy even in 200 years.
Gosh amighty. You build the best an most beautiful furniture in the world. I know only the wealthy could afford it. But maybe someday i could own one of your beautiful pieces of art.
I can't wait to see what you do in each of the videos you release. I take great pleasure in seeing someone who uses hand tools with such great skill but also utilizes machinery. Most of us just wish we had the patience and ability to learn the skills you possess and show in all of your videos. Thank you.
My favorite channel. I love planes and you have the best ones! Also, realy like the longer video format. I would love to see longer videos with no speed up. But of course, any video is appreciated!
There have been screws in most furniture since the 1400s. There is no more secure way to join the top to the sides than rabbeted blocks screwed in from the bottom. Unless you want to make a keyhole fitted piece, which would take a year and not be as strong anyway...
You are an absolute wood magician! Every time I watch your making, I think it doesn’t get any better than this? Then you start a new project like this one and it goes to whole new level! Thank you for giving the time to show us your work and skills, you are an inspiration to all of us! May I wish you and your co workers & family a very merry Christmas and please stay safe and well in this present crisis. God bless you!
Check out Rob Cosman, he covers a lot about sharpening hand planes and chisels, as well as using, maintaining and tuning up a hand plane out of the box. Razor sharp hand tools along with a whole lot of correct practice and I believe most wood workers can achieve this level of Craftsmanship, but definitely something that takes an abundance of dedication and passion to get even close to this level of Craftsmanship. IMHO
Absolutely first class craftsmanship. I love the combination of machinery and hand tools. Machinery takes the hardest work whilst hand tools finish it off. Plus no music! What! Yes, just the sounds you want to hear. Style is very personal and, for me, visible dovetails detract rather than add. But, that’s just my style.
@@WilliamWBG absolutely the right thing to do. I must say that in my years of making furniture for clients, I came to the conclusion that it was largely the arrogance of many UK makers to almost insist on using dovetails as if dovetails somehow confirmed that you were skilled. I have said before that I doubt that the makers of the 18th and 19th century would increased their costs by making dovetails by hand if the current range of equipment and adhesives had been available then. Anyway, I only ever had one client come back to me about dovetails. This was on a credenza in a modern style. That client asked me to take out “those fussy joints) as he felt they detracted from the clean lines of the rest of the piece. But, the client is King. If they want dovetails and are willing to pay for the labour involved, then great. Making a living from bespoke furniture is hard enough without arguing with paying clients.
You are truly in rarified air when it comes to woodworking. It is a pleasure to watch you create these masterpieces. I was wondering if you ever considered doing a video about your sharpening process for your tools. I bet it would be one of your most viewed videos.
I also would love to see a sharpening video. When I plane walnut it behaves like styropor. But you manage to get a glass like finish. Biggest respect ever!
buy the right saws, start cutting dove tails that don’t fit right, you learn and keep cutting, they’ll start to fit, you learn some more, then cut more and they’ll fit better, han confidence, along the way, then you’ll develop your own technique and style, and they’ll fit nice nice, and the pieces will look so nice that you can present them to your family and if they are supportive they will praise you for your new talent, if they don’t then you keep at it and do your thing and enjoy the hell out of it because your new girlfriend will appreciate it and have babies with you and you can build furniture for your wife and child and be happy. because that’s what life is all about.....happiness! happiness, from the inside!
Wonderful work. Love watching your videos. Could you please take a bit more about your finishing process? What pound cut do you use for the shellac? How many coats in total? Do you apply with brush, rag, or spray? Thank you so much/
Nothing better on a Saturday morning than a cup of coffee and a new video from Doucette and Wolfe. Absolutely beautiful work. Curious, how long does it take for you to complete such a piece?
He builds furniture on commission from customers request. He’s not building furniture for competition of the most difficult. This is furniture that will will decrease in value. It will be collected for generations. Something you will see on Antiques Roadshow in 100 years
Very pretty, well done! I was wondering if you could describe some of your tool choices - I noticed a LN 4 1/2, a Veritas low angle smoother, and a LN 9. How have you set these up and for what specific task? For example, do you have a lower bevel angle on the 9, hence using that to smooth the endgrain rather than the low angle smoother? Do you sharpen them at a specific bevel angle? Similarly, is the 4.5 set up for a task that the low angle smoother isn't as well suited to? (Or perhaps the size just makes it better for smoothing the faces, I believe that's mostly what I saw though I don't remember exactly.)
Very nice! Love your work! Quick question: don't those doors in the credenza need to be stabilized somehow? Sorry if it's a trivial question.. I'm just starting in woodworking and everywhere I look, they say that wide board like that will move/warp and need to be stabilized - either with a frame, breadboard ends, sliding dovetails, etc. Thank you!
Beautiful work, and obviously highly practised and efficient with the minimum of fuss to achieve perfect accuracy. May I ask, when you use the Knew fretsaw to cut out the waste on the tailboards, do you then have to go back and clean up with a dovetail chisel, or can you move straight to marking the pins?
Absolutely stunning. I guess you skip planned in the beginning just to see the grain better for layout? Any advice on building hand tool skills? I assume just keep doing it. 😅
What is the boxed plane you are using on the dovetail ends? I have not seen one like it and with your address, it might be a test model from Lie-Nielson. Curious as to its intended use. Awesome work.
do you find solid drawers won't move as well during spring/summer? I would expect with the sides expanding and contracting they would be tighter in warm, moist weather and looser in cold, dry weather. Do you build in different tolerances depending on where you're shipping the furniture to?
Beautiful work and stunning walnut. Curious how many hours you spent on making such a piece? Also, what is this weird low angle plane to clean the pins of the frame and the drawers, I don’t recognize it. Thanks !
I've always wanted to know what the plane is called that you're using around the 5 min mark to plane the end grain on the pins. It looks like an LN product but I can't find it on their website.
@@tylerscott305 That's what I thought but can't find anything about it online. I think you're totally spot-on, however - in their "block front chest building process" video you can see him using what I think is the same tool as a shooting board plane at the 2:40" mark.
@@tenaciousjeebs Lie Nielsen #9 Miter Plane. Discontinued. The grip in the block front chest video is called a "hot dog", also from Lie Nielsen. www.rpwoodwork.com/blog/2014/05/11/three-practical-tips-for-shooting/ www.jimbodetools.com/products/discontinued-lie-nielsen-no-9-miter-plane-95131 www.lie-nielsen.com/products/email-subscription-thank-you-hot-dog-for-the-low-angle-jack-plane-
@@Doucetteandwolfefurniture can you please explain the advantage of using a dedicated plane for this purpose rather a low angle Jack or other low type of plane? My first thought is the heft of the miter plane helps push through the end grain of those dovetails? Thank you!
Not being dramatic when I say this might be the best furniture maker in the country
Who in their right mind would thumbs down this video? Great work. I could watch for hours.
Its such a pleasure to see planing instead of sanding.
Then tune in to Rob Cosman. He handplanes absolutely everything many times over. And it is great work also.
That’s more than talent. It’s MAGIC!
If there’s anyone more talented that this man, I’d love to see their work. I’m always left speechless after watching every video.
Love that Door Closing “The End”.
This talented man probably built his own crib to sleep in !!! Truly talented.
There is something so satisfying about the sound of a properly sharpened plane blade! Really nice work.
Man I remember watching you before I picked up my first Woodworking tool. Still amazes me just as much today!
That grain configuration on the front is absolutely stunning!!
Next level skills. The precision in just his sharpening skills would take a long time to master. Those planes cut so nice......
I know! The amount of figuring in that wood is nuts and he just wisps away at it like its poplar with no knots.
Ive been watching this channel for a few years now and still blows me away his ability to run the grain along with everything else... goals! Thank You!!
I've watched a couple of your videos at this point and I am quite inspired by your work.
Очень приятно видеть правильный инструмент в умелых руках ! С удовольствием посмотрел ваш фильм . Тоже люблю рубанки от Томаса Ли Нельсона и Веритас . С уважением из России
Soy Ebanista la tercera generación y aprecio tu forma de trabajar por que es justo como me enseñaron a mi .
Desde Madrid mi enhorabuena
More stunning art work, I mean wood work from you guys. I guess after you do thousands of dovetails, they all come out perfect like yours.
Great matchup on the wood grain. You have produced a legacy set that someone will enjoy even in 200 years.
Poetry in motion! And not a pencil filled spotless apron to be seen. Keep up the good work.
You are really a great artist. Greetings from sicignano degli alburni italy. A colleague who admires you a lot.
Thanks Enrico. It’s very much appreciated!
They all look sturdy enough to be work benches. Great work.
Man that walnut is beautiful! Top work as always, this is breathtaking.
Thank you! I lucked out with this Walnut!
@@Doucetteandwolfefurniture You've done it justice!
Simply the best.
Gosh amighty. You build the best an most beautiful furniture in the world. I know only the wealthy could afford it. But maybe someday i could own one of your beautiful pieces of art.
Amazing craftsmanship given you built it in 16 minutes.
I can't wait to see what you do in each of the videos you release. I take great pleasure in seeing someone who uses hand tools with such great skill but also utilizes machinery. Most of us just wish we had the patience and ability to learn the skills you possess and show in all of your videos. Thank you.
Totalmente maravilloso trabajo!
Indescribably jaw dropping!!
walnut sure looks purdy donit paw !
as wide as those boards are the dovetails fit nice. great job.
Wow, as always. I would love to see a video on you sharpening your tools.
You guys are second to none!
Thanks Daniel! Its very much appreciated
Beautifully done. Great craftsmanship and wonderful wood, thanks for showing us.
What a spectacular project! That walnut is out of this world. Awesome craftsmanship. I just figured out we are in the same town!
Always a pleasure to watch!
I am always in awe of your craftsmanship. Top notch!!!
Great job with the sequential grain, especially for the doors on the credenza.
My favorite channel. I love planes and you have the best ones! Also, realy like the longer video format. I would love to see longer videos with no speed up. But of course, any video is appreciated!
Not one grain of sand was harmed while making this Credenza! Absolutely amazing work!
Thanks Vinnie!
Beautifully done and no hardware, screws or nails that I can see.
And no fancy drawer slides either :) Who needs them when a craftsman can make them fit like that!
@@RobRobertson1000 He just uses his machines to work six sides of each board slightly oversize and then it's all hand tools.
There have been screws in most furniture since the 1400s. There is no more secure way to join the top to the sides than rabbeted blocks screwed in from the bottom. Unless you want to make a keyhole fitted piece, which would take a year and not be as strong anyway...
What an amazing piece of work. Thanks for sharing.
Again on a level few ever obtain, outstanding! Great hand tool skills, I’m great full for the video’s you present, thank you. Please keep them coming!
You are an absolute wood magician! Every time I watch your making, I think it doesn’t get any better than this? Then you start a new project like this one and it goes to whole new level! Thank you for giving the time to show us your work and skills, you are an inspiration to all of us!
May I wish you and your co workers & family a very merry Christmas and please stay safe and well in this present crisis.
God bless you!
He needs to provide a tutorial on operating and maintaining a hand plane. Best planing I have ever seen. Must be incredibly sharp.
Check out Rob Cosman, he covers a lot about sharpening hand planes and chisels, as well as using, maintaining and tuning up a hand plane out of the box. Razor sharp hand tools along with a whole lot of correct practice and I believe most wood workers can achieve this level of Craftsmanship, but definitely something that takes an abundance of dedication and passion to get even close to this level of Craftsmanship. IMHO
Nice! Love your jointer!
Wonderful, thank you for sharing. Really appreciate the craftsmanship you demonstrate.
Love the grain on the front of the credenza. Top work! 👍
Awesome, thank you!
Beautiful work as always my Friend! Thank you for sharing the video with us!💖👌👍😎JP
Dammit, i missed you so much! Have been watching you since 2013.
Phenomenal symbol of simple art 👏👏👏
Thanks Hassan!
Fantastic work!!!
Thank you! Cheers!
Fantastic work
Excellent work,lovely wood
Great design and work. Liked the bench extension you used when planning the drawers.
Beautiful!
Lovely work.
Beautiful work.
Thanks!
Absolutely first class craftsmanship. I love the combination of machinery and hand tools. Machinery takes the hardest work whilst hand tools finish it off. Plus no music! What! Yes, just the sounds you want to hear.
Style is very personal and, for me, visible dovetails detract rather than add. But, that’s just my style.
He builds according to his customers wishes. This is a business. A very very talented businessman
@@WilliamWBG absolutely the right thing to do. I must say that in my years of making furniture for clients, I came to the conclusion that it was largely the arrogance of many UK makers to almost insist on using dovetails as if dovetails somehow confirmed that you were skilled. I have said before that I doubt that the makers of the 18th and 19th century would increased their costs by making dovetails by hand if the current range of equipment and adhesives had been available then. Anyway, I only ever had one client come back to me about dovetails. This was on a credenza in a modern style. That client asked me to take out “those fussy joints) as he felt they detracted from the clean lines of the rest of the piece.
But, the client is King. If they want dovetails and are willing to pay for the labour involved, then great. Making a living from bespoke furniture is hard enough without arguing with paying clients.
Beautiful.
Beautiful...as always.
Thanks Jeff!
Thank you, best video yet sublime work
Wow, thanks!
You are truly in rarified air when it comes to woodworking. It is a pleasure to watch you create these masterpieces. I was wondering if you ever considered doing a video about your sharpening process for your tools. I bet it would be one of your most viewed videos.
I bet he uses apprentices to do the sharpening. If not, he should. Sharpening is always the first skill learned in an apprenticeship
I also would love to see a sharpening video. When I plane walnut it behaves like styropor. But you manage to get a glass like finish. Biggest respect ever!
Beautiful
Awesome! And what a wood!!!
I could make furniture that nice, and then I would wake up.
buy the right saws, start cutting dove tails that don’t fit right, you learn and keep cutting, they’ll start to fit, you learn some more, then cut more and they’ll fit better, han confidence, along the way, then you’ll develop your own technique and style, and they’ll fit nice nice, and the pieces will look so nice that you can present them to your family and if they are supportive they will praise you for your new talent, if they don’t then you keep at it and do your thing and enjoy the hell out of it because your new girlfriend will appreciate it and have babies with you and you can build furniture for your wife and child and be happy.
because that’s what life is all about.....happiness!
happiness, from the inside!
May its life be filled with coasters and children on leashes. 👌🏼♥️
But it’s built like a rock. Coasters, yes. Children couldn’t harm this without some utensils, like markers or paint
Como sempre , sensacional .
That looks great! What is the square box looking plane and what is it typically used for?
Amazing. Well done
Trabajo hermoso, felicidades!!
Wonderful work. Love watching your videos. Could you please take a bit more about your finishing process? What pound cut do you use for the shellac? How many coats in total? Do you apply with brush, rag, or spray? Thank you so much/
Dear sir, What was that plane used on the end grain at 3:55? Wonderful pieces by the way. Thanks for taking us along.
stunnig works, as always
Amazing wood! How much does that much wood of that quality even cost?!?
Супер работа класс. Super!!!!!!
И не говори
Nothing better on a Saturday morning than a cup of coffee and a new video from Doucette and Wolfe. Absolutely beautiful work. Curious, how long does it take for you to complete such a piece?
Belíssima obra de arte!
I would literally move across the country to learn from you
Same, but i would need a boat to cross the Atlantic 😂
Lovely lovely work..........but not the loveliest pieces of furniture you've ever made.
He builds furniture on commission from customers request. He’s not building furniture for competition of the most difficult. This is furniture that will will decrease in value. It will be collected for generations. Something you will see on Antiques Roadshow in 100 years
Very pretty, well done! I was wondering if you could describe some of your tool choices - I noticed a LN 4 1/2, a Veritas low angle smoother, and a LN 9. How have you set these up and for what specific task? For example, do you have a lower bevel angle on the 9, hence using that to smooth the endgrain rather than the low angle smoother? Do you sharpen them at a specific bevel angle? Similarly, is the 4.5 set up for a task that the low angle smoother isn't as well suited to? (Or perhaps the size just makes it better for smoothing the faces, I believe that's mostly what I saw though I don't remember exactly.)
Is that a 16 inch jointer? What a beast.
Very nice! Love your work! Quick question: don't those doors in the credenza need to be stabilized somehow? Sorry if it's a trivial question.. I'm just starting in woodworking and everywhere I look, they say that wide board like that will move/warp and need to be stabilized - either with a frame, breadboard ends, sliding dovetails, etc. Thank you!
Beautiful work, and obviously highly practised and efficient with the minimum of fuss to achieve perfect accuracy. May I ask, when you use the Knew fretsaw to cut out the waste on the tailboards, do you then have to go back and clean up with a dovetail chisel, or can you move straight to marking the pins?
Grande!!!
are the walls of the fingers holes 90 degrees or did you make a slight slope on the inside to aid in gripping the holes?
Absolutely stunning. I guess you skip planned in the beginning just to see the grain better for layout? Any advice on building hand tool skills? I assume just keep doing it. 😅
I would be interested if you would include in your description references to the various planes you use in your very fine work. Your craft is envious!
Lie Nielsen. Most tools are Lie Nielsen. If not, then Veritas by Lee Valley.
Awesome! Do you radius the blade slightly on the smoother to minimize tracks in the surface?
What is the boxed plane you are using on the dovetail ends? I have not seen one like it and with your address, it might be a test model from Lie-Nielson. Curious as to its intended use. Awesome work.
do you find solid drawers won't move as well during spring/summer? I would expect with the sides expanding and contracting they would be tighter in warm, moist weather and looser in cold, dry weather. Do you build in different tolerances depending on where you're shipping the furniture to?
Beautiful work and stunning walnut. Curious how many hours you spent on making such a piece? Also, what is this weird low angle plane to clean the pins of the frame and the drawers, I don’t recognize it. Thanks !
You make it look so easy. Just wish each of your videos were at least an hour long.
I can smell the walnut from here.
Awesome! Do you have any camber or feathering on your smoothing plane blades?
How often do you sharpen your plane blades? Daily? Throughout the day?
What was that plane at 4:48, a miter plane? Phenomenal workmanship and those dovetails look absolutely lovely!!!
I'd like to know the same thing.
I've always wanted to know what the plane is called that you're using around the 5 min mark to plane the end grain on the pins. It looks like an LN product but I can't find it on their website.
I want to know too. It looks like it can be used as a shooting plane, but I've never seen one with a pan-handle tote like that.
@@tylerscott305 That's what I thought but can't find anything about it online. I think you're totally spot-on, however - in their "block front chest building process" video you can see him using what I think is the same tool as a shooting board plane at the 2:40" mark.
Might be a previous iteration of the LN shooting board plane before their current model.
@@tenaciousjeebs Lie Nielsen #9 Miter Plane. Discontinued. The grip in the block front chest video is called a "hot dog", also from Lie Nielsen.
www.rpwoodwork.com/blog/2014/05/11/three-practical-tips-for-shooting/
www.jimbodetools.com/products/discontinued-lie-nielsen-no-9-miter-plane-95131
www.lie-nielsen.com/products/email-subscription-thank-you-hot-dog-for-the-low-angle-jack-plane-
Incredible skill here. Which hand plane were you using when cleaning up the dovetails?
Thanks Adam. Its a Lie Nielsen No 9 Iron Miter plane, unfortunately they are not made anymore
What kind of hand plane are you using on the end grain? The one that looks like a box?
how long does it take you to build that amazing set??
What is that crazy hand plane called that looks like a giant printer ink cartridge that you use on endgrain?
I believe they are called a miter plane. The one he has is probably a Lie Nielsen
Standard or high angle frog for that smoothing?
12:16 plane pushing triceps 💪🏼
Love your channel, beautiful work as per usual. What type of plane do you use when you're first knocking down the dovetails? The one at 12:35
Thanks Dan. The plane is a Lie Nielsen no 9 Iron Miter Plane
@@Doucetteandwolfefurniture can you please explain the advantage of using a dedicated plane for this purpose rather a low angle Jack or other low type of plane? My first thought is the heft of the miter plane helps push through the end grain of those dovetails? Thank you!